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Jews and Baseball: An American Love Story

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Jews and Baseball:
An American Love Story
Directed byPeter Miller
Written byIra Berkow
Produced byWill Hechter
Peter Miller
StarringSandy Koufax
Kevin Youkilis
Shawn Green
Larry King
Ron Howard
Yogi Berra
etc.
Narrated byDustin Hoffman
CinematographyAntonio Rossi
Stephen McCarthy
Allen Moore
Edited byAmy Linton
Music byMichael Roth
Production
company
Clear Lake Historical Productions
Distributed bySeventh Art Releasing
Release date
  • November 5, 2010 (2010-11-05) (limited)
Running time91 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Jews and Baseball: An American Love Story is a 2010 American documentary film directed by filmmaker Ken Burns' associate Peter Miller, written by Pulitzer Prize winner Ira Berkow, and narrated by Academy Award winner Dustin Hoffman. It is about the connection and history between American Jews and baseball.

Kenneth Turan of The Los Angeles Times, wrote that the "warm and enthusiastic" film "not only lives up to its title ... but also delivers a bit extra as well." The documentary received the Best Editing Award at the Breckenridge Film Festival.

Synopsis

The film was directed by filmmaker Ken Burns' longtime collaborator Peter Miller. It was written by Pulitzer Prize winner Ira Berkow, and narrated by two-time Academy Award winning actor Dustin Hoffman.

Dustin Hoffman does not normally narrate films, and initially turned down the project. But when he looked at the script, he changed his mind, saying: "Oh, this is about bigotry and overcoming anti-Semitism, about discrimination and these issues that I grew up with, that really matters to me".

The film opens with a clip from the 1980 satirical comedy film Airplane!, in which a flight attendant is asked by a passenger if she has anything light to read. She responds by offering an ultra-thin leaflet, saying: "How about this leaflet, Famous Jewish Sports Legends?"

The stereotype of Jews as non-athletic, as well as anti-semitism, are two issues that many Jewish baseball players faced and had to overcome. Noted anti-semite Henry Ford wrote on May 22, 1920: “If fans wish to know the trouble with American baseball they have it in three words—too much Jew.” A number of early Jewish ballplayers changed their names, so that it would not be apparent that they were Jewish.

The movie discusses how in fact there have been key Jewish ballplayers in every decade since baseball started in the 1860s, and how that helped Jews assimilate and counteract the stereotype of Jews as cerebral but non-athletic. The film is in part about Jewish immigration and assimilation into American society, bigotry against Jews, the passing on of Jewish traditions even during assimilation, heroism, and the breaking of Jewish stereotypes.

Director Miller said:

At its heart, this is a film about overcoming stereotypes. Bigotry against Jews has faded a great deal...

The story of a once-marginalized people finding their way into the American mainstream offers lessons for a country that continues to grapple with its ideal as a place where talent should overcome prejudice, where we can retain our differences while still being American, where anyone who can hit or pitch or run can be a part of the magic and drama of our national game.

The documentary contains rare archival footage and photos, and music ranging from Benny Goodman to Yo-Yo Ma to Rush.

Ballplayers, and interviewees

The documentary highlights Al Rosen (rookie of the year in 1950, and MVP in 1953), who is frank about how he dealt with anti-Semitism: "There's a time that you let it be known that enough is enough.... You flatten ." It also discusses Moe Berg ("he spoke seven languages, and couldn't hit in any of them"), Lipman Pike (his $20-per-week for the 1866 Philadelphia Athletics made him the first professional player; he led the American League in home runs three times), pitcher Barney Pelty (the "Yiddish Curver"), "Subway Sam" Nahem, Moe Solomon ("The Rabbi of Swat"), and Shawn Green. Those interviewed also include Norm Sherry, Ron Blomberg, Elliott Maddox, and Bob Feller. Also featured in the film are Norm Sherry, Ron Blomberg, Maury Allen, Larry King, Ron Howard, Yogi Berra, and Bob Feller.

Sandy Koufax

The documentary focuses especially on two players. One is Hank Greenberg, a two-time American League MVP, five-time All Star, and Hall of Famer. Greenberg said the anti-Semitic comments yelled at him by fans made him more motivated. He sat out Yom Kippur during a tight pennant race on the advice of his mother. The film notes a column in the Detroit Free Press, in which Edgar Guest wrote in response to Greenberg's absence from the lineup: “We shall miss him on the infield, and shall miss him at the bat, but he’s true to his religion and we honor him for that.”

The other is Sandy Koufax, Hall of Fame pitcher, three-time Cy Young Award winner, and 7-time All Star who sat out a World Series game to observe Yom Kippur. When Koufax went to synagogue instead of pitching the first game of the 1965 World Series, Don Drysdale replaced him and was bombed; when Dodgers Manager Walter Alston arrived at the mound to take him out of the game, Drysdale quipped: "Right now I bet you wish I was Jewish too." Koufax agreed to a rare filmed interview for the documentary.

More-current ballplayers are also discussed, including All Stars Kevin Youkilis, Ian Kinsler, and Ryan Braun. Youkilis notes in the film:

It’s something that I probably won’t realize until my career is over, how many people are really rooting for me and cheering for me. And it’s not just because I went 3-for-4, or had a great game. It’s just the fact that I represent a lot of Jewish people and a lot of the Jewish heritage and the struggles that a lot of our people have had.

As of 2010, there had been 166 Jewish major leaguers, the newest being Ike Davis with the New York Mets and Danny Valencia with the Minnesota Twins.

Release

Among the film's notable festival appearances and special screenings in 2010 were July 15 & 16 at the Jerusalem Film Festival, July 25 at the Stony Brook Film Festival, July 25 at the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival, July 31 & August 1 & 8 at the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival, August 10-15 at the Rhode Island International Film Festival, October 3 at the Baseball Hall of Fame, and October 14 & 16 at the Jacksonville Film Festival.

Reception

Critical response

Kenneth Turan of The Los Angeles Times, describing it as warm and enthusiastic, wrote that the documentary: "not only lives up to its title ... but also delivers a bit extra as well." John Anderson writes in Variety that "With terrific narration by Dustin Hoffman, Jews and Baseball makes effective use of archival footage and interviews, the most spectacular of which is a lengthy sequence featuring the usually reclusive Koufax". Andrew Schenker of Time Out New York described it as: "a breezy compendium of fun facts and colorful figures ... likely to prove irresistible to baseball fans, Hebraic or otherwise."

Awards

The film received the Best Editing Award at the Breckenridge Film Festival on June 12, 2010.

See also

Further reading

Books

References

External links

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